Palestinian women walk past a wall bearing posters, including a portrait of prominent prisoner Marwan Barghouti, during a rally in Ramallah, in support of him and other prisoners on hunger strike in Israeli jails on April 24, 2017. (AFP/Abbas Momani)

A power plant in Gaza City is pictured from behind a fence on April 16, 2017. (AFP/Mahmud Hams)

Illustrative photo of female Military Police officers checking the IDs and vehicles of Palestinians at the checkpoint at the Shuafat Refugee Camp in East Jerusalem, on December 22, 2015. (Hadas Parush/Flash90)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says Israel will cut its required payment to the United Nations by $1 million following the adoption of a UNESCO resolution that rejects Israeli sovereignty over Jerusalem.

“The outrageous UNESCO decision and this kind of harassment has a price,” Netanyahu says.

In recent months, Israel slashed a total of $8 million in UN dues following what it saw as anti-Israel measures at the UN Human Rights Council and the Security Council.

The Palestinian Authority will stop paying for electricity in the power-starved Gaza Strip and “dry up” the flow of funds to the territory’s Hamas rulers, a senior official says.

Hussein al-Sheikh, head of the PA Civil Affairs Department, says the terrorist group profits because it collects electricity payments from Gaza residents. “We are not going to continue financing the Hamas coup in Gaza,” he tells the Voice of Palestine radio station.

Al-Sheikh says the aim is to “dry up Hamas’ financial resources.” He says efforts would be made not to harm services to Gaza residents, but did not elaborate.

Meanwhile Abbas aide Ahmed Majdalani says that as a next step, the West Bank government would sharply reduce the amount of medicine it ships to Gaza every month. Majdalani alleges that Hamas is “selling the medicine and collecting the money.”

He says that only “necessary medicine” would be sent directly to Gaza hospitals.

The head of the Anglican Church prays at the Western Wall in Jerusalem as part of a Mideast tour.

Justin Welby, the archbishop of Canterbury, is seen praying at the Jewish holy site alongside Britain’s Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis.

Earlier in Jordan, Welby met with Iraqi Christian refugees and led prayers at the Bethany Beyond the Jordan archaeological site, believed to be the place where John the Baptist baptized Jesus of Nazareth.

At the site, he called for greater support for those in need, saying: “In this place where we hear birdsong and running water we are surrounded, within a few kilometers (miles), with violence.”

US President Donald Trump will press Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas to end payments to families of Palestinians imprisoned in Israeli jails, according to US officials, one of several actions Washington believes could lead to resumed peace talks with Israel.

Other actions include an end to Palestinian anti-Israel rhetoric and incitement of violence, said officials familiar with planning for the meeting. It will be Trump and Abbas’ first face-to-face discussion.

“We hope this will be a new beginning,” Abbas told Palestinians at a meeting in Washington last night.

He blamed the lack of dialogue in recent years on the Israeli government, saying its leaders “have no political vision,” and reiterated his demands for an independent Palestinian state along pre-1967 lines, with east Jerusalem as its capital.

“Without this we will not accept any solution,” said Abbas, who touted an Arab League peace plan that offers Israel diplomatic relations with the Muslim world for a Palestinian state. “There is no alternative.”

The Justice Ministry fines the opposition Yesh Atid party NIS 40,000 ($11,000) for using “sensitive,” personal information on Israeli Holocaust survivors for political campaigning purposes during the 2015 election.

According to a statement from the ministry, the party requested and received the information from The Center of Organizations of Holocaust Survivors, an umbrella group headed by former lawmaker Colette Avital.

Avital, who is also fined NIS 10,000 ($2,760) by the ministry, handed over files to the political party without the consent of the survivors and without completing the formal, legally mandated registration process.

Yesh Atid proceeded to use this “sensitive” and “personal” information to campaign to survivors, including through direct mail, the ministry says, in what it described as an illegal breach of the survivors’ privacy.

The party says in a statement Wednesday the incident was a “one-time mishap done during an election campaign, in good faith, and with no knowledge that the practice is improper.”

The IDF Court of Appeals largely refuses a request by the attorneys of Sgt. Elor Azaria, the so-called Hebron shooter, to allow the admission of evidence from other cases of security personnel who killed people against orders or protocol but were not tried.

The judges reject 16 of the 17 cases the defense wanted to include in the appeal, allowing only a case in which a volunteer police officer shot dead a Palestinian terrorist after a stabbing attack in Jaffa last year.

Defense attorney Yoram Sheftel argues the entire case was tainted by comments made by then-defense minister Moshe Ya’alon and IDF chief of staff Gadi Eisenkott against Azaria immediately after the incident.

He cites previous cases where judges have acknowledged the influence of media coverage and statements by politicians on legal proceedings.

Sheftel also points to the promotion of Azaria’s company commander — who provided damning testimony — before his appearance in court in his argument that the army attempted to influence the outcome of the trial.

The company commander testified that after the incident Azaria told him he killed the Palestinian assailant because he deserved to die. Part of Sheftel’s appeal is that Azaria never said that.

He further says showing the “enemy’s” video of the incident, by which he means the left-wing B’tselem organization, to soldiers before they gave their testimony to military police “also influences” the outcome.

Syrian rebels say they are suspending their participation as a latest round of peace talks began in Kazakhstan, with the warring sides set to discuss a plan to create safe zones.

“The rebel delegation is suspending the meetings because of the violent airstrikes on civilians. The suspension will continue until shelling stops across all Syria,” a rebel source in the Kazakh capital Astana tells AFP.

Syrian government and rebel delegations gather for the start of a fourth round of talks sponsored by regime backers Russia and Iran and opposition supporter Turkey.

The latest round of negotiations begins with a series of bilateral meetings and was set to focus on a Russian plan to establish “de-escalation zones” around the war-torn country.

Elor Azaria’s defense attorney Yoram Sheftel points to the company commander’s first testimony after the incident, in which he didn’t say Azaria said he killed the assailant because he deserved to die. Initially the commander only said Azaria told him he killed the assailant because he moved.

Judge Segal presses Sheftel to explain how he can claim that Azaria told the company commander that he shot the assailant because he moved when Azaria later testified that he told the commander that he shot the assailant because he was afraid of a bomb.

Sheftel says the defense doesn’t have to prove anything.

He says the issue is what the company commander and another soldier who also testified that Azaria said the assailant deserved to die, not what Azaria testified.

A controversial Israeli rabbi who made disparaging remarks about female IDF soldiers in March is going on indefinite leave from the pre-army yeshiva he heads in the West Bank.

According to Channel 2, the move will likely be seen as a victory for Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman, who called for the resignation of Rabbi Yigal Levinstein and threatened to withdraw accreditation from his academy if he failed to step down.

The furor first erupted after Channel 2 broadcast a video in March in which the rabbi — from the prominent Bnei David academy in the settlement of Eli — saying that military service drives female soldiers “crazy,” makes them unattractive, and strips them of their Jewishness.

When asked by Judge Tzvi Segal why the officers would do such a thing, Sheftel says they did it in order to square their testimonies with the claims of the chief of staff, who decried Azaria’s actions.

Sheftel is quickly corrected by the judges and prosecution that IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot made his statement after the battalion and brigade commanders testified.

Elor Azaria’s Defense Attorney Yoram Sheftel casts doubt on testimony of an IDF corporal who testified that Azaria told him the assailant deserved to die.

The defense attorney says the corporal, whose name cannot be published, gave his testimony when he was under arrest and accused of not preventing the shooting. Thus, Sheftel says, the soldier could have been looking to “save his skin” by testifying against Azaria.

Later outside the courtroom, an IDF official disputes Sheftel’s claim, telling The Times of Israel that the corporal was not under arrest when he gave his testimony.

A large explosion strikes a coal mine in northern Iran, trapping dozens of miners and killing at least two, state media reports.

Ambulances, helicopters and other rescue vehicles raced to the scene in Iran’s northern Golestan province as authorities work to determine the scale of the emergency.

The IRNA news agency quoted Golestan provincial emergency management department head Sadeq Ali Moghadam as saying that 40 to 50 people are believed to be trapped in the mine outside of the town of Azadshahr.

One official says twelve injured miners are pulled out alive.

The mine has 500 workers and the explosion happened during a change of shift, state media says.

Zionist Union MK and former defense minister Amir Peretz promises Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu a political “safety net” if he should choose to pursue a peace initiative with the Palestinians.

In a statement directed to US Donald Trump hours ahead of his first visit with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, Peretz says that Netanyahu “does not have to worry about his coalition partners.”

“We in the Zionist Union faction will grant him a safety net for a political move toward making a peace agreement without preconditions and without portfolios if he chooses to take the path of political settlement.”

“We hope the meeting between Trump and Abu Mazen [Abbas] will bear fruit and advance the chances for a political settlement of two states for two peoples, an arrangement that is of great Israeli interest,” he says.

Peretz is one of nine candidates in the running for chairman of the Labor Party.

Opposition leader Isaac Herzog says the earlier announcement by ex-defense minister Amir Peretz offering Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu unconditional support if he pursues a peace deal with Palestinians is not an official party statement.

“The leader of the opposition is in favor of a diplomatic process as he has said dozens of times and has been involved in efforts that have cost him nearly all of his political capital, however, Peretz released that statement on his own volition,” a statement from Herzog’s spokesperson says.

Herzog and Peretz are facing off against 7 other candidates for the leadership of the Labor Party in a July primary vote.

The International Committee of the Red Cross is urging Israel not to restrict family visits for hundreds of hunger-striking Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails.

In a rare statement, the humanitarian organization criticizes what it called a “systemic suspension” of visits by Israeli authorities as a punishment of the striking prisoners, in violation of international law.

ICRC says that “families are paying the price for this situation.”

The strike reached its 17th day today. The prisoners seek better conditions, including more family visits.

Israel Prison Service spokesman Assaf Librati says about 850 prisoners are still taking part in the strike. He denied claims Israel is violating international law, but didn’t elaborate.

In the West Bank town of Ramallah, thousands of Palestinians are attending a solidarity rally for the prisoners.

Trump praises Abbas for his role in signing the 1993 Olso Accords, and says the agreement laid out the foundations for an Israeli-Palestinian peace.

In a joint press conference, Trump says he is committed to supporting Abbas in helping formulate “the final and most important peace agreement that will give peace and prosperity” to both Israelis and Palestinians.

Trump tells Abbas that “there can be no peace until incitement ends,” and urges Palestinian leaders to “speak in a unified voice” against hatred.

At a joint press conference with Trump, Abbas calls on Israel to withdraw from the West Bank and recognize an independent Palestinian state based on the 1967 lines.

“It’s about time for Israel to end its occupation of our people and of our land after 50 years; we are the only remaining people in the world that are living under occupation,” he says. “We are aspiring and want to achieve our freedom, dignity and our right to self-determination of our own nation.”

“We also want Israel to recognize the Palestinian state just as the Palestinian people recognize the state of Israel,” he says.

“I affirm to you that we are raising our children and grandchildren on a culture of peace, and we are endeavoring to bring about security and peace for our children to live in peace, freedom and security.”

After a joint Trump-Abbas press conference, the two leaders and their respective delegations sit down for a working lunch at the White House to discuss the “very difficult situation between Israel and the Palestinians.”

“It’s a great honor to have President Abbas with us,” Trump says according to reports. “We are having lunch together. We will be discussing details of what has proven to be a very difficult situation between Israel and the Palestinians.

“Let’s see if we can find the solution,” he says. “It’s something that I think is, frankly, maybe not as difficult as people have thought over the years.

“We need two willing parties,” Trump adds. “We believe Israel is willing. We believe you’re willing. And if you are willing, we are going to make a deal.”

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson calls Abbas’s first-ever meeting with Trump a “historic opportunity,” expressing optimism of reaching an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement under the current administration.

“I think it’s a historic opportunity because there are a number of positive conditions in place, and I know under your leadership that we hope good things will happen,” Tillerson says at a working lunch after a joint Trump-Abbas press conference.

Former US ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro expresses exasperation at President Donald Trump’s approach to brokering Mideast peace.

“I’m an optimist by nature. But goodness gracious!” Dan Shapiro posts on Twitter in response to Trump’s remarks to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict “may not be as difficult as people have thought over the years.”

The left-wing American Jewish Mideast policy group J Street says it’s “encouraged by US President Donald Trump’s determination… to launch a serious attempt to negotiate an end to the Israel-Palestinian conflict.”

The statement comes on the heels of a joint press conference between Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Trump, who said he would “do whatever is necessary” to facilitate a peace agreement.

In a statement, J Street says it still awaiting “critical details about how he sees such a peace being achieved.”

The group reiterates its support for a two-state solution, and calls on Trump to “commit himself to this principle without further delay if he is serious about pursuing peace.”

Haim Korsia’s office is issuing the endorsement a day after a remarkably acrimonious televised debate between the two candidates ahead of the May 7 runoff. Titled “Call to Vote for Mr. Emmanuel Macron,” it was co-signed by Pastor François Clavairoly, president of the Protestant Federation of France, and Anouar Kbibech, president of the French Council of the Muslim Faith.

A combination of video grabs from an AFP video taken on May 3, 2017 during a live broadcast televised debate shows French presidential election candidate for the far-right Front National (FN) party, Marine Le Pen (L) and French presidential election candidate for the En Marche ! movement Emmanuel Macron talking during a face to face debate ahead of the second round of the French presidential election. (AFP PHOTO / STRINGER)

An explicit show of support for any particular candidate is highly unusual for all three clergymen.

“Fully aware that our roles require us to be non-partisan, we are, however, first and foremost responsible citizens and therefore openly are calling for a vote in favor of Emmanuel Macron,” the three men write.

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A controversial Israeli rabbi who made disparaging remarks about female IDF soldiers in March is going on indefinite leave from the pre-army yeshiva he heads in the West Bank.

According to Channel 2, the move will likely be seen as a victory for Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman, who called for the resignation of Rabbi Yigal Levinstein and threatened to withdraw accreditation from his academy if he failed to step down.

The furor first erupted after Channel 2 broadcast a video in March in which the rabbi — from the prominent Bnei David academy in the settlement of Eli — saying that military service drives female soldiers “crazy,” makes them unattractive, and strips them of their Jewishness.